Kommentare zu: Kontextsensitive Werbunghttp://www.rackblogger.de/2007/02/12/kontextsensitive-werbung/
We love to HOST you. :-)Sun, 02 Aug 2015 18:22:57 +0000http://wordpress.org/?v=2.0.9Von: Klaus Kepplerhttp://www.rackblogger.de/2007/02/12/kontextsensitive-werbung/#comment-1531
Fri, 23 Feb 2007 08:35:43 +0000http://www.rackblogger.de/2007/02/12/kontextsensitive-werbung/#comment-1531Höhö... ein weiteres Beispiel könnte http://www.convinceme.net sein - da kann man online debattieren...Höhö… ein weiteres Beispiel könnte http://www.convinceme.net sein - da kann man online debattieren…
]]>Von: Stefan F.http://www.rackblogger.de/2007/02/12/kontextsensitive-werbung/#comment-1192
Tue, 13 Feb 2007 22:06:30 +0000http://www.rackblogger.de/2007/02/12/kontextsensitive-werbung/#comment-1192Erinnert mich an einen Artikel von Joel Spolsky:
Don’t start a business if you can’t explain what pain it solves, for whom, and why your product will eliminate this pain, and how the customer will pay to solve this pain. The other day I went to a presentation of six high tech startups and not one of them had a clear idea for what pain they were proposing to solve. I saw a startup that was building a way to set a time to meet your friends for coffee, a startup that wanted you to install a plug-in in your browser to track your every movement online in exchange for being able to delete things from that history, and a startup that wanted you to be able to leave text messages for your friend that were tied to a particular location (so if they ever walked past the same bar they could get a message you had left for them there). What they all had in common was that none of them solved a problem, and all of them were as doomed as a long-tailed cat in a room full of rocking chairs.
http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/Micro-ISV.htmlErinnert mich an einen Artikel von Joel Spolsky:

Don’t start a business if you can’t explain what pain it solves, for whom, and why your product will eliminate this pain, and how the customer will pay to solve this pain. The other day I went to a presentation of six high tech startups and not one of them had a clear idea for what pain they were proposing to solve. I saw a startup that was building a way to set a time to meet your friends for coffee, a startup that wanted you to install a plug-in in your browser to track your every movement online in exchange for being able to delete things from that history, and a startup that wanted you to be able to leave text messages for your friend that were tied to a particular location (so if they ever walked past the same bar they could get a message you had left for them there). What they all had in common was that none of them solved a problem, and all of them were as doomed as a long-tailed cat in a room full of rocking chairs.